Is there a way to prioritize one table column in HTML? The thing is, I've got 4 columns, and the content may change a lot for the content in all cells. But I want the first column to take up as much space as possible, so the 3 other columns only use as much width as they need to keep everything on one line.
The table itself has a fixed width.
Assign a class to the three last cells in each row like this: <td class="tight">. Now, add CSS like this to your stylesheet:
td.tight
{
width: 1px;
white-space: nowrap;
}
The width rule instructs your cell to be as narrow as possible, and the white-space rule dictactes that the contents of the cell should never wrap across several lines.
This solution assumes, that the table is styled to have some fixed width (possible 100%).
Related
I'm posting a screenshot of the element in question. You should be able to see, I am applying element-specific styling removing all margin, padding and setting the width to 0px. No matter what I do, this table data element is abnormally large. I want to significantly reduce its width, but it won't listen to me. I have the feeling this is some obscure HTML algorithm that I know nothing of but can't say. Any ideas?
Update: The answer was that HTML will make sure the table data elements take up the entire width of the table, no matter if you try to narrow individual elements (so in essence, it was some weird HTML algorithm or functionality). That said, I will accept the answer below because it is so thorough it should cover the other possible issues people may run into.
There is some obscurity to how the width of a table cell (<td>) is defined, as official documentation is unclear and allows some behavior to be defined by the browser. But here are a few characteristics that appear stable across the spectrum of browsers.
Managing the Width of HTML Table Cells <td>
Table with Single Cell
In a table that consists of a single cell – in other words, a table with one column and one row – where the width hasn't been explicitly defined in the <table> element, the width can be controlled directly by the <td> element.
This won't work (the td rule will be ignored):
table { width: 100%;}
td {width: 300px;}
The width: 300px fails because the <table> element has a defined width.
However, this will work:
/* table { width: 100%;} */
td {width: 300px;}
DEMO
Table Column with Multiple Cells
To set the width of a table cell in a column with multiple cells the entire column must be adjusted. Any widths assigned to the individual <td>s will be ignored. Simply adjust the width of the table to adjust the width of the <td>s in the column.
DEMO
Table with Multiple Columns and Multiple Rows
To set the width of a table with multiple columns and rows, the Table Column Element (<col>) is ideal because it targets individual columns.
DEMO
The problem described in the question involves a table cell that won't accept a shorter width assignment. The first realization here is that the table cell by default expands to fill 100% of the column width allotted (learn more about <td> default width). The way to reduce the width of this cell is described above.
HOWEVER, I suspect that in some cases the person wanting to reduce the width of a table cell is actually trying to reduce the width of the content inside the cell (like an image or a form input). In these cases, adjusting the table may be unnecessary. All that would be needed is to adjust the width of the content itself, or its container (div, span, figure, etc.).
In this image, the width of the table cells are at 100%, but the width of the input fields vary.
DEMO
colspan
If in fact the need is to reduce the width of a single cell within a column of multiple cells, then you may want to consider the colspan attribute. With colspan, columns can me merged making cells wider. Cells without colspan assigned will be shorter, and appear even shorter when their adjacent cells are hidden.
In this image, display: none has been applied to the bottom right cell of this 2-column table.
DEMO
So, in the case of your table cell that won't budge, consider adjusting the width of the <table> element (if it's a single column table), assign and adjust a <col> element (if it's a multi-column table), adjust the width of the content directly (if that's the only element you want adjusted), or use colspan.
Sorry I can't be more specific about the exact solution in your case. No code was provided for review. But hopefully one of these methods helps you out.
I have a table with entire columns I'd like to hide from view.
The real-life scenario is mobile platforms. I desire a table's less useful information to be hidden so that it fits on a narrow screen.
I've played around with it but there doesn't seem to be a true way to get this to happen.
http://jsfiddle.net/3712Ledn/
Even if I apply the class to all cells of the same column and then apply hidden or collapse, they still take up space.
If I turn display: none;, then the columns do collapse, but auto width columns do not expand to take up the new space.
Is there any way to achieve this without using JS?
Maybe this helps if i understand you. The seconds column is hidden and the first column stretches over the full page.
http://jsfiddle.net/uow30orv/
<table id="real" width="100%">...
You will need a tag inside the cell you want to collapse, then use a table-layout: fixed; on your <table>, this way, you will be able to set a width: 0; to the column you want to hide.
I have an HTML table with 2 columns. I want to show them both full, the second with right align. Now I make that with width: 100%; for the first column. But now the second column is always wrapped by words.
I want the second column to be on the right, but wrapped only if there is not enough space to show both columns full.
If you are really thinking about mobile or smaller screens on this case you should consider using a media query. In this case, when the screen falls below a certain width, you can specify a wider width for the right column.
http://www.css3.info/preview/media-queries/
Add the following CSS styling to the cell on the right:
td {white-space: nowrap;}
This will prevent the text inside the cell from wrapping, as in your example.
i have a <table> and many (34) <td>.
I want to display three variable cells e.g. "name", "hobby1", "hobby2" and then I need to display 31 cells (for each day).
The width of the <table> is limited to about 1000px.
In the day cells always a string of the length 3 shall be displayed or nothing.
My problem is that, the cells never have the same width even if set with css.
The first three columns may be fixed too.
How can I manage my table, that all day <td>s (1-31) have the same width - no matter if the content is nothing or XXX?
http://jsfiddle.net/sBYdu/
A couple of css additions can achieve this.
Use a fixed table-layout
Apply width to your table header not the table cell
Apply word wrapping to the table cells
http://jsfiddle.net/nnePW/
table {
table-layout: fixed;
}
I have a table in a HTML form. It has a fixed height for optical reasons. The number of rows in the table varies depending on the number of form fields available.
Problem: If there are very few rows, all rows are stretched vertically, increasing the space between input elements.
I could avoid this by giving the data rows a (fake) fixed height. I don't like that approach because there is no fixed height I could give it (relative font sizes, accessibility) and I fear future problems - say for example that IE9 decides to take cell heights literally.
What can I do?
I have a last (empty) row but no idea what to put in there so that it automatically occupies all "available" space.
Put heightless table in a div with a fixed height which mimics the table (border? bgcolor?).
By the way, just doing tbody { display: inline; } instead of an empty row works in all real browsers. No, not in MSIE. The tbody element has a lot of shortcomings in MSIE. It also lacks the ability to overflow: scroll; which would be great to have a scrollable table with a fixed header.
Couldn't you set the cell height to 100% for the last empty row, this should presumably cause that last row to take up the rest of the fixed space
I guess this is not doable.
Yeah, table based websites are beyond ages, however you would still need tables to display data. In fact I have to agree with Pekka that this is not doable on the table cell itself, but there is something we can fashion:
Try wrapping the data inside the td cell into a div and style that div to the height you want and set its overflow property to hidden.